Ribbons, composed of silk and cotton, in which silk is the
component material of chief value, used exclusively as trimmings
for ornamenting hats and bonnets and having a commercial value only
for that purpose, are liable to only 20 percent duty, under the
following provision in "Schedule N. -- Sundries," in § 2502 of
Title 33 of the Revised Statutes, as enacted by the Act of March 3,
1583, 22 Stat. 512:
"Hats and so forth, materials for braids, plaits, flats, laces,
trimmings, tissues, willow sheets and squares, used for making or
ornamenting hats, bonnets and hoods, composed of straw, chip,
Grass, palm leaf, willow, hair, whalebone, or any other substance
or material not specially enumerated or provided for in this act,
twenty percentum
ad valorem,"
and are not liable to 50 percent duty, under the following
clause in "Schedule L. -- Silk and Silk Goods," in the same
section,
id., 510:
"All goods, wares and merchandise, not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act, made of silk, or of which silk is the
component material of chief value, fifty percentum
ad
valorem."
The present case is controlled by that of
Hartranft v.
Langfeld, 125 U. S. 128.
It was proper for the Circuit Court to direct a verdict for the
plaintiff.
Page 132 U. S. 615
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought in the Superior Court of the City of
New York, by Charles August Edelhoff and Emil Rinke against William
H. Robertson, collector of the port of New York, on the 25th of
March, 1884, and removed by the defendant into the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Southern District of New York, to recover
an excess of duties paid under protest on goods entered at the
custom house on the 20th of August, 1883, the duty having been paid
on the same day.
The case was tried by Judge Coxe and a jury, on April 12, 1886.
The articles in dispute were ribbons, composed of silk and cotton,
in which silk was the component material of chief value. There was
due protest and appeal. The collector assessed a duty of 50 percent
ad valorem upon the goods under the following clause in
Schedule L -- Silk and Silk Goods, in section 2502 of Title 33 of
the Revised Statutes, as enacted by the Act of March 3, 1883, 22
Stat. 510:
"All goods, wares, and merchandise, not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act, made of silk, or of which silk is the
component material of chief value, fifty percentum
ad
valorem."
The plaintiffs claimed in their protest and upon the trial that
the goods were liable to only 20 percent duty under the following
provision in Schedule N -- Sundries, of the same title, 22 Stat.
512:
"Hats, and so forth, materials for braids, plaits, flats, laces,
trimmings, tissues, willow sheets and squares, used for making or
ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods, composed of straw, chip,
grass, palm leaf, willow, hair, whalebone, or any other substance
or material, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act,
twenty percentum
ad valorem. "
Page 132 U. S. 616
On the trial, the undisputed evidence was that the articles in
question were used exclusively as trimmings for ornamenting hats
and bonnets, and had a commercial value only for that purpose. The
defendant offered no evidence on that subject in contradiction of
that put in by the plaintiffs. At the close of the testimony, the
defendant asked the court to direct a verdict in his favor upon the
ground that the foregoing provision in Schedule N in regard to
"hats, and so forth, materials for," should be construed as
embracing only articles made of a substance or material not
elsewhere specially enumerated or provided for in the act of 1883,
and articles made only of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow,
hair, whalebone, or some other like substance or material, but this
request was denied by the court, and the defendant excepted. The
court then, at the request of the plaintiffs, directed the jury to
find a verdict in their favor for the excess of duties collected on
the hat ribbons or hat bands and upon certain charges, commissions,
and coverings, in regard to which there was no dispute, and the
defendant excepted to such action of the court. The jury found a
verdict accordingly for the plaintiffs, on which a judgment was
entered in their favor, to review which the defendant has brought a
writ of error.
That the articles in question, silk being their component
material of chief value, were liable to a duty of 50 percent
ad
valorem as "goods, wares, and merchandise not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act, made of silk, or of which
silk is the component material of chief value" if they were not
specially enumerated or provided for in the act of 1883 is plain.
The question, and the only question, therefore, is whether they
come under the clause, "hats, and so forth, materials for" as being
"trimmings," "used for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and
hoods," composed of any of the seven substances specifically named,
"or any other substance or material, not specifically enumerated or
provided for in this act," and were thus liable to a duty of only
20 percent
ad valorem. It is to be especially noted that
the act of 1883 does not, in Schedule L, in regard to silk and silk
goods, or elsewhere,
Page 132 U. S. 617
impose any duty upon silk ribbons by that name, or upon ribbons
made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief
value, otherwise than as they may be covered by the clause above
quoted in regard to 50 percent duty. We think it perfectly clear
that the words "composed of" in the 20 percent clause above quoted
relate to the eight articles previously specifically mentioned in
that clause, and not to the words "hats, bonnets, and hoods;" also
that the words in the same clause "not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act" relate to the same eight articles, and
not to the words, "hats, bonnets, and hoods" or to the words, "any
other substance or material." The clause is to be read as if the
word "and" were inserted before the word "composed" and again after
the word "material," so that the clause, as far as the question
involved in the present case is concerned, would read: "Trimmings
used for ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods,
and
composed of" any of the seven articles specially named, "or any
other substance or material, and not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act."
We cannot agree with the contention of the defendant that the
words "any other substance or material" are to be read as if they
were "any other
like substance or material," because while
"straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow" are vegetable substances,
"hair" and "whalebone" are animal substances. There is no identity
of genus among the two descriptions of articles specifically
mentioned, and we see no warrant for interpolating the word "like,"
and applying it distributively to each of the two classes of
substances specifically mentioned. The contention that, in the
presence of the words "any other substance or material," the naming
of seven substances specifically is surplusage, and without
meaning, because the words "any other substance or material" are
adequate to cover those seven substances seems to us without force
in view of the well known tautological phraseology of provisions in
tariff acts.
There is a clause in Schedule N of section 2502 of title 33 of
the Revised Statutes, as enacted by the Act of March 3, 1883, 22
Stat. 511, which it is proper to consider in connection
Page 132 U. S. 618
with the clause in regard to "Hats, and so forth, materials
for," and which reads as follows:
"Bonnets, hats, and hoods for men, women, and children, composed
of chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or straw, or any other vegetable
substance, hair, whalebone, or other material, not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act, thirty percentum
ad
valorem."
It will conduce to the solution of the question in hand to
consider prior legislation on the subject.
In § 22 of the Act of March 2, 1861, c. 68, 12 Stat. 192, a
duty of 30 percent
ad valorem was imposed on "flats,
braids, plaits, sparterre, and bonnets," and on "hats and bonnets
and bonnets," and on
"hats and bonnets for men, women, and children composed of
straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or any other vegetable
substance, or of hair, whalebone, or other material not otherwise
provided for,"
and by section 16 of the same act (p. 186), the following duties
were imposed on silk and silk articles:
"On silk in the gum, not more advanced in manufacture than
singles, tram, and thrown or organzine, fifteen percentum
ad
valorem; on all silks valued at not over one dollar per square
yard, twenty percentum
ad valorem; on all silks valued at
over one dollar per square yard, thirty percentum
ad
valorem; on all silk velvets, or velvets of which silk is the
component material of chief value, valued at three dollars per
square yard, or under, twenty-five percentum
ad valorem;
valued at over three dollars per square yard, thirty percentum
ad valorem; on floss silks, twenty percentum
ad
valorem; on silk ribbons, galloons, braids, fringes, laces,
tassels, buttons, button cloths, trimmings, and on silk twist,
twist composed of mohair and silk, sewing silk in the gum or
purified, and all other manufactures of silk or of which silk shall
be the component material of chief value, not otherwise provided
for, thirty percentum
ad valorem."
By this provision, a duty of 30 percent was imposed on "silk
ribbons" by name. No question of the kind before us could have
arisen under that statute.
In § 8 of the Act of July 14, 1862, c. 163, 12 Stat. 551,
are found the following clauses in regard to duties:
"On bonnets, hats, and hoods for men, women, and children
composed
Page 132 U. S. 619
of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or any other vegetable
substance or of silk, hair, whalebone, or other material, not
otherwise provided for, forty percentum
ad valorem; on
braids, plaits, flats, laces, trimmings, sparterre, tissues, willow
sheets and squares used for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets,
and hoods, composed of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or
any other vegetable substance, or of hair, whalebone, or other
material not otherwise provided for, thirty percentum
ad
valorem."
There was no provision in that action regard to silk, or silks,
or silk ribbons, other than the one in the first of the two clauses
above quoted, in regard to bonnets, hats, and hoods composed of
silk. So the provision of the act of 1861, in regard to silk,
silks, and silk ribbons, remained in force, and the provision in
the second clause above quoted, in regard to trimmings, could not
apply to silk ribbons because they were "otherwise provided for" in
the act of 1861, though the question would not have been material,
because silk ribbons were, under the act of 1861, subject to 30
percent duty, and the trimmings were, under the act of 1862,
subject to the same duty.
By the Act of June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 202, duties on imports
were increased, and by section 8 of that act, p. 210, from July 1,
1864, in lieu of existing duties, the following were imposed on
silk, and articles of silk:
"On spun silk for filling in skeins or cops, twenty-five
percentum
ad valorem; on silk in the gum not more advanced
than singles, tram, and thrown or organzine, thirty-five percentum
ad valorem; on floss silks, thirty-five percentum
ad
valorem; on sewing silk, in the gum or purified, forty
percentum
ad valorem; on all dress and piece silks,
ribbons, and silk velvets, or velvets of which silk is the
component material of chief value, sixty percentum
ad
valorem; on silk vestings, pongees, shawls, scarfs, mantillas,
pelerines, handkerchiefs, veils, laces, shirts, drawers, bonnets,
hats, caps, turbans, chemisettes, hose, mitts, aprons, stockings,
gloves, suspenders, watch chains, webbing, braids, fringes,
galloons, tassels, cords, and trimmings, sixty percentum
ad
valorem; on all manufactures of silk or of which silk is the
component material of chief value, not otherwise provided for,
fifty percentum
ad
Page 132 U. S. 620
valorem."
Thus, the duty on silk ribbons by name was advanced from 30
percent, as in the act of 1861, to 60 percent
No subsequent legislation until the Revised Statutes of June 22,
1874, affected the duty on silk ribbons. In Schedule M, "Sundries,"
of section 2504, of the Revised Statutes (2d ed. 474), were
contained the following provisions:
"Bonnets, hats, and hoods, for men, women, and children,
composed of chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or any other vegetable
substance, hair, whalebone, or other material not otherwise
provided for, forty percentum
ad valorem; composed of
straw, forty percentum
ad valorem,"
and p. 476:
"Hats, etc., materials for: braids, plaits, flats, laces,
trimmings, tissues, willow sheets and squares, used for making or
ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods, composed of straw, chip,
grass, palm leaf, willow, or any other vegetable substance, or of
hair, whalebone, or other material, not otherwise provided for,
thirty percentum
ad valorem,"
and in schedule H, "Silks and Silk Goods," p. 469:
"Silk in the gum, not more advanced than singles, tram, and
thrown or organzine, thirty-five percentum
ad valorem;
spun silk for filling in skeins or cops, thirty-five percentum
ad valorem; floss silks, thirty-five percentum
ad
valorem; sewing silk in the gum or purified, forty percentum
ad valorem; silk twist, twist composed of mohair and silk,
forty percentum
ad valorem; dress and piece silks,
ribbons, and silk velvets, or velvets of which silk is the
component material of chief value, sixty percentum
ad
valorem; silk vestings, pongees, shawls, scarfs, mantillas,
pelerines, handkerchiefs, veils, laces, shirts, drawers, bonnets,
hats, caps, turbans, chemisettes, hose, mitts, aprons, stockings,
gloves, suspenders, watch-chains, webbing, braids, fringes,
galloons, tassels, cords, and trimmings, and ready-made clothing of
silk, or of which silk is a component material of chief value,
sixty percentum
ad valorem; buttons and ornaments for
dresses and outside garments, made of silk, or of which silk is the
component material of chief value, and containing no wool, worsted,
or goats' hair, fifty percentum
ad valorem; manufactures
of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value,
not otherwise provided for, fifty percentum
ad valorem.
"
Page 132 U. S. 621
Thus, in the clause in regard to "bonnets, hats, and hoods," the
word "silk," found in the act of 1862, was omitted in the Revised
Statutes, and silk ribbons, or ribbons of which silk was the
component material of chief value, were made by the Revised
Statutes dutiable
eo nomine at 60 percent, as in the act
of 1864.
Then came the Act of February 8, 1875, 18 Stat. 307, by the
first section of which the following provision was made in regard
to duties on silk and articles of silk, in lieu of then existing
duties:
"On spun silk, for filling, in skeins or cops, thirty-five
percentum
ad valorem; on silk in the gum, not more
advanced than singles, tram, and thrown or organzine, thirty-five
percentum
ad valorem; on floss silks, thirty-five
percentum
ad valorem; on sewing silk, in the gum or
purified, forty percentum
ad valorem; on lastings, mohair
cloth, silk twist, or other manufactures of cloth, woven or made in
patterns of such size, shape, or form, or cut in such manner, as to
be fit for buttons exclusively, ten percentum
ad valorem;
on all goods, wares, and merchandise not otherwise herein provided
for, made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of
chief value, irrespective of the classification thereof for duty by
or under previous laws, or of their commercial designation, sixty
percentum
ad valorem, provided that this act shall not
apply to goods, wares, or merchandise which have, as a component
material thereof, twenty-five percentum or over in value of cotton,
flax, wool, or worsted."
By that act, ribbons of silk or ribbons in which silk was the
component material of chief value were not made dutiable
eo
nomine, but were dutiable at 60 percent as "goods, wares, and
merchandise not otherwise herein provided for, made of silk or of
which silk is the component material of chief value." They were not
otherwise provided for in the act of 1875. This act superseded all
prior statutes in regard to goods made of silk, or of which silk
was the component material of chief value. Of course, under the act
of 1875, the goods in question here would have been dutiable at 60
percent.
Then came the act of 1883, the three provisions in which, in
regard to "bonnets, hats, and hoods," "hats, and so forth,
Page 132 U. S. 622
materials for," and "silk and silk goods," have been before
quoted. The changes made in that act from the Revised Statutes of
1874, in regard to "bonnets, hats, and hoods," were these: those
articles were qualified with the words, "not specially enumerated
or provided for in this act," and the duty was reduced from 40
percent to 30 percent. The changes made in regard to "hats, and so
forth, materials for," were these: the words, "willow, or any other
vegetable substance, or of hair, whalebone, or other material not
otherwise provided for," were changed to the words, "willow, hair,
whalebone, or any other substance or material not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act," and the rate of duty was
reduced from 30 percent to 20 percent. Changes were also made in
the schedule in regard to "silks and silk goods." The duty of 60
percent on silk ribbons
eo nomine was omitted, and also
the like duty on silk trimmings, or of which silk was the component
material of chief value, and the duty of 50 percent on
"manufactures of silk, or of which silk is the component material
of chief value, not otherwise provided for," was changed to alike
duty on "all goods, wares, and merchandise, not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act, made of silk, or of which
silk is the component material of chief value."
Section 6 of the Act of March 3, 1883, provides that, on and
after the 1st of July, 1883, "the following sections," being 23
sections, one of which is section 2502, with Schedules A to N,
"shall constitute and be a substitute for title 33 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States," thus abolishing all enactments
found in the original title 33 in regard to duties on imports.
It is thus seen that by the act of 1883, no duty is imposed upon
silk ribbons by name. Under the Revised Statutes of 1874, silk
ribbons, being charged by name with a duty of 60 percent, were not
charged with a duty of 50 percent as "manufactures of silk, or of
which silk is the component material of chief value, not otherwise
provided for," because they were otherwise provided for, and they
could not have been liable to a duty of 30 percent, as "trimmings .
. . used for . . . ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods," and
not
Page 132 U. S. 623
otherwise provided for, because they were otherwise provided
for, in Schedule H, as silk ribbons, by name at 60 percent. But
when we come to the act of 1883, silk ribbons are not therein
specifically named, in Schedule L or elsewhere, and are not
dutiable at 50 percent as silk goods not specially enumerated or
provided for in the act of 1883, because in the clause in regard to
"hats and so forth, materials for," they are specially enumerated
and provided for in that act, as trimmings used for making or
ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods, and composed of some other
substance or material than the seven substances specially named,
and are not otherwise specially enumerated or provided for in that
act, and are therefore dutiable at 20 percent
The question, however, is not only clear on principle, on a
review of the statutory provisions, but it is disposed of by
decisions of this Court.
In
Arthur v. Zimmerman, 96 U. S.
124, the articles imported were composed of cotton, and
were known commercially as "hat braids." The collector imposed duty
upon them under that clause of section 6 of the Act of June 30,
1864, 13 Stat. 209, which provided for a duty of 35 percent on
"cotton braids, insertings, lace trimmings, or bobbinets, and all
other manufactures of cotton." The importers claimed that they were
dutiable at only 30 percent. It appeared that the articles were
used exclusively for making and trimming hats and bonnets, and the
circuit court and this Court held them to be dutiable at only 30
percent, under that clause of § 8 of the Act of July 14, 1862,
c. 163, 12 Stat. 551, and of Schedule M of section 2504 of the
Revised Statutes, (2d ed. p. 476), which imposed that rate of duty
on trimmings used for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and
hoods, and composed of other material than the substances
specifically named, and not otherwise provided for.
But the question in regard to goods substantially identical with
those in question in the present case was presented to this Court
and decided by it in the case of
Hartrant v. Langfeld,
125 U. S. 128. The
goods in that case were imported into Philadelphia, and entered at
the custom house there in
Page 132 U. S. 624
September and October, 1883. The suit was begun on the 28th of
February, 1884. It was tried on April 6, 1886. The writ of error
was sued out August 5, 1886, while the writ of error in the present
case was brought September 29, 1886. The two transcripts of record
were filed in this Court the same day, October 13, 1886, but the
Langfeld case was advanced on motion, and heard February
15, 1888, while the present case has stood on the docket until
reached in its regular order.
The articles in the
Langfeld case were velvet ribbons
made of silk and cotton, in which silk was the material of chief
value. The collector assessed upon them a duty of 50 percent, under
that clause of Schedule L of section 2502 of title 38 of the
Revised Statutes, as enacted by the Act of March, 3, 1883, 22 Stat.
510, before quoted, which reads as follows.
"All goods, wares, and merchandise, not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act, made of silk, or of which silk is the
component material of chief value, fifty percentum
ad
valorem."
The plaintiffs in the suit claimed, and the jury found under the
instructions of the court, that the duty ought to have been
assessed under the paragraph in Schedule N of section 2502 of the
same title, providing for "hats, and so forth, materials for,"
above quoted, and that the duty should have been only 20 percent.
The goods in question there were "trimmings," and were used "for
making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods." There was no
evidence that they were used exclusively for that purpose. The
testimony on the part of the plaintiffs tended to show that they
were used chiefly for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and
hoods, but that they might also be, and sometimes were, used for
trimming dresses. The testimony on the part of the defendant tended
to show that they were dress trimmings equally with hat trimmings,
and were commonly used as much for the one purpose as the other.
The circuit court charged the jury that the use to which the
articles were chiefly adapted, and for which they were used,
determined their character, within the meaning of the statute, and
that if the articles were hat trimmings, chiefly used for making
and ornamenting hats, the jury should find a verdict for the
plaintiffs, the suit having
Page 132 U. S. 625
been brought by the importers against the collector to recover
the difference between 20 percent and 50 percent. The defendant had
requested the court to charge the jury that if the articles were
not specially enumerated or provided for, and silk was their
component material of chief value, they were dutiable at 50 percent
under the clause before quoted, and the verdict should be for the
defendant; also that if the jury should find that silk was the
component material of chief value in them, and they were not
exclusively or specially used for hat trimmings, they were not
subject to the 20 percent duty; also that if the jury should find
that the articles could properly be classified, under the above
rules, as liable to 20 percent duty, and also as liable to 50
percent duty, they were dutiable at the higher rate, and the
verdict should be for the defendant, and also that unless the jury
should find that the articles were not specially provided for, and
were fitted only for use for making or ornamenting hats, their
verdict should be for the defendant. The circuit court declined to
give those instructions, and the defendant excepted.
It appears by the opinion of this Court that it was contended
here on the part of the defendant that the true construction of the
statute was not only that the use of the material must be for
making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods, but that the
material itself must be in some one of the forms named in the
clause regarding "hats, and so forth, materials for." This Court,
however, held that under the charge of the court as given, the
objection was not well taken that the charge would have authorized
a recovery if the goods in question were materials used for making
or ornamenting hats, although not coming within the enumeration of
the articles so specified. This Court further said that the circuit
court instructed the jury that they must find the goods in question
to be "trimmings," chiefly used for making or ornamenting hats,
bonnets, and hoods, composed of a material not otherwise specially
enumerated or provided for. This Court also said that velvet
ribbons were not specially mentioned as subject to a duty by that
name or description; that they were manifestly trimmings, according
to the natural meaning of
Page 132 U. S. 626
that word, and because they were used to trim either hats or
dresses, and that the real controversy was as to the purpose for
which, as "trimmings," they were principally used. As to the
request of the defendant to charge the jury that if they should
find that the articles could be classified properly as subject to
20 percent duty and also as subject to 50 percent duty, they were
liable to duty at the higher rate under the provision of section
2499 of the Revised Statutes, this Court said that the principle of
that section was not applicable to the case, because the ribbons
were found by the jury to be trimmings chiefly used for making or
ornamenting hats; that this brought them within the provision of
Schedule N, which fixed the duty at 20 percent, and that, being
thus specially provided for, they were excluded from the operation
of all other provisions. On these views, this Court affirmed the
judgment of the circuit court.
Therefore, in addition to the conclusion which results from
considering the history of the legislation on the points involved,
we are of opinion that the decision in the case of
Hartranft v.
Langfeld controls that case, and that is was proper for the
circuit court to direct a verdict for the plaintiffs. Such practice
has been often sanctioned by this Court. There was no question of
fact for the jury, and the defendant did not ask to go to the jury.
Bevans v. United
States, 13 Wall. 56;
Walbrun v.
Babbitt, 16 Wall. 577;
Hendrick v.
Lindsay, 93 U. S. 143;
Arthur v. Zimmerman, 96 U. S. 124;
Arthur v. Morgan, 112 U. S. 495;
Anderson Co. v. Beal, 113 U. S. 227,
113 U. S. 242;
Marshall v. Hubbard, 117 U. S. 419;
North Pennsylvania Railroad v. Commercial Bank,
123 U. S. 727,
123 U. S.
733.
Judgment affirmed.